57 Misc. 2d 101 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1968
The son and daughter of an aged incompetent petition this court for permission to make equal gifts to themselves of the sum of $500,000 from the incompetent’s estate, the sum being about one half of the incompetent’s estate. The basis for the requested order is to cut down on the burden of excessive taxes against the estate and to permit the enjoyment of property of the incompetent by her family during her lifetime. A special guardian appointed for the incompetent, in his report, joins in the application and recommends approval of the petition.
The basic principle advanced on behalf of petitioner in commending this course of action to this court, is that this court has the power and authority to determine ‘ ‘ whether to authorize transfers of the property of the incompetent for the purpose of avoiding unnecessary estate or inheritance taxes or expenses of administration, and tp authorize such action where it appears from all of the circumstances that the ward, if sane, as a reasonably prudent man, would so plan his estate, there being no substantial evidence of a contrary intent.” (Matter of Christian-sen, 248 Cal. App. 2d 398, 424.) The Christiansen case is a well-reasoned and documented review of the applicable law and expounds the “ substituted judgment ” rule; i.e., that the court would upon available evidence substitute its judgment for that of
Petitioners’ counsel urges that the judicial path has been blazed in the State of New York by the ruling in Matter of Carson (39 Misc 2d 544). It is well to note at this point that great attention was devoted in Christiansen to the Carson case and that the California, New York, and Delaware courts all comment on the effort to follow a testamentary scheme in the exercise of the ‘ ‘ substituted judgment ’ ’. This concern becomes a vital indication for the court’s ultimate ruling. Hence, this court devotes some attention to the details of Carson. Here, in Carson, at the time of the submission to the approving court, the incompetent was ‘ ‘ in extremis ’ ’ and died within six days after the signing of the order directing payment; further, the order authorized a gift of a portion of the corpus to petitioner and his sister ‘ ‘ who constituted the next of kin, the only known relatives and the principal legatees under the incompetent’s last will and testament Overlooked in the Carson case, but which later had to be resolved, was the fact that the will of the incompetent provided for a postponed payment of the principal to the daughter until she was 40 years of age. Between the signing of the order directing distribution of a part of the corpus and the decision in 39 Misc 2d 544, the court remarked that redelivery of the distributed share to the daughter had been made to the estate of the then deceased incompetent. A pattern evolves then that the court will give great heed, among other circumstances, in making a 11 substituted judgment ’ ’ decision to the testamentary desire of the incompetent. As to the power of the court to make a direction of a gift as against contra expressed terms of the unprobated last will and testament, Carson did not attempt to pass upon it, but it is approached in Christiansen. In the brief for petitioner, able counsel cited the impressive Dupont case (41 Del. Ch. 300 [1963]), but here again the Delaware court noted that such gift, in addition to effecting very substantial tax savings duplicated the testamentary plan of the incompetent’s will as one of the bases for its ruling. Obviously, the testamentary plan of the incompetent becomes an important but not necessarily a determinative issue.
From the petition and report, in this instant proceeding, it appears that incompetent is 86 years of age. Petitioner offers no actual medical proof as to her life expectancy but submits an actuarial life expectancy of 4.7 years. The director of the hospital where the incompetent now is does not express any opinion
Petitioners will sUbini; orders to this court providing" for a plenary hearing, at which time proof should be offered, encompassing as a minimum the criteria enunciated in the Christiansen case, and decision will be resolved on the petition pending the determination and findings oh said hearing.